TRUSTY OLD TYPEWRITER

For the second time in the Art of Dr. Seuss Collection’s 20 year history, we proudly announce the release of a mixed-media print with collage on paper—I ALWAYS Pick Up All My Play-Things.Only two artworks from The Art of Dr. Seuss Collection now contain the added dimensionality of collage. These artworks, This Sound Sounded Merry! and our newest release, I ALWAYS Pick Up All My Play-Things, faithfully replicate Ted Geisel’s antiquated lifelong process of creating a book with the help of his trusty old typewriter. Here we witness the moment where hand-typed and hand-cut blocks of copy, often still in progress, are taped or glued against a preliminary rough drawing, or even the final line work itself. This glimpse of Dr. Seuss’s exact process of creation, caught in the midst of development, is one of the key elements behind the considerable demand for This Sound Sounded Merry!

And Sally and I did not know
What to say.
Should we tell her
The things that went on there that day?

Should we tell her about it?
Now, what SHOULD we do?

Well . . .
What would YOU do
If your mother asked YOU?

Pigment Print on Paper with Collage, 14 x 19" with deckled edges
Limited Edition of: 1500 Arabic Numbers, 99 Patrons' Collection, 155 Collaborators' Proofs, and 5 Hors d'Commerce

Image: First edition copy ofThe Cat in the Hat,1957.

In 2010, LIFE Books selected Dr. Seuss as one of the “100 People Who Changed the World,” choosing the men and women who made history and brought us from the distant past to the present day. Of Ted they said: “Theodor Seuss Geisel will always be known by his nom de nonsense. It was in that guise that Geisel entertained America’s young with his rollicking rhymes, nutty narratives, and playful (but artful) pictures. And Dr. Seuss did even more than entertain. Kids were blown away [by The Cat in the Hat], and when their parents learned of the subversive value of this intricately crafted reader, they were, too; the book was a runaway best-seller in English, then traveled the world in a host of translations. Dr. Seuss wasn’t a real doctor—he didn’t possess a Ph.D.—but he was something even better for the world’s schoolchildren.”